So, then it would be kind of a waste to register the program if it is not going to be supported or developed any further, right? I just wanted to check before I registered it and ended up regretting it. Thank you, sir.

Oh, and running an older version of TC just to be able to view thumbs is not a very good trade-off that makes any kind of good sense._________________chmod a+x /bin/laden -- Allows anyone the permission to execute /bin/laden

Let me get this straight. The new version doesn't doesn't support as many file formats as the free version used to, right? Like XnView and others. And you have no plans to at least get it up to the old version standard? What other features could be added that would make sense to pay for a plugin that does less that the free one used to do? Or is this plugin release the bait to get your highly-priced commercial program going?_________________chmod a+x /bin/laden -- Allows anyone the permission to execute /bin/laden

Didn't the old version of the plugin support most of the file types that the commercial version does now?

And as far as using the old version of the plugin, we can't do that because of the changes in TC, and going to an older version of TC just for a plugin is kindof a moot point.

It's not that I don't like the plugin, I do. It was one of the best. And I have no problem paying for something if it will do what I want it to do. I was under the impression that you were going to update the plugin to work with the newer version of TC, as you had stated. But you took stuff out of it apparently which makes it kindof useless for a lot of what it was useful for before.

Hey, it's your plugin and yours to do with what you want, I guess. Hopefully someone will pick up the ball and make one that will do at least what your older version did._________________chmod a+x /bin/laden -- Allows anyone the permission to execute /bin/laden

Yeah regressions blow. Opera has been failing badly in that area of late as well. The logic behind this move makes sense, though likely doesn't seem fair: updated to work with current TC and Windows, all other extraneous file types are gone.

Available options are definitely non-optimal:
1) Stop viewing extraneous Thumbs in TC (Register Plugin).
*) Stop using those other programs how you would of preferred.
2) Use older version of TC and the programs you like (Do Not register).

I'll stick with External Apps for ThumbView/managing, which don't rely on third parties that can break functionality at whim. Certainly TC's thumb support could be improved as such, but it's likely not a priority.

I've been playing around with PicaJet FX, and
Viewer2 -- Which had one of the most interesting interfaces I'd seen in a while. Supposedly he's working on the next version (new code base). I've used Picasa before but that usually drives me crazy and I uninstall it.

Honestly though, when I get Win7 later this year - there will be little reason not to just use Explorer for image directories. Even under Vista, Explorer's handling of Image folders was extremely smooth when compared to XP/W2K or even external viewer apps.

There's definitely a few areas where TC doesn't shine so bright when compared to plain old Explorer, and thumb handling is currently one of those places.

Instead of StackHash_5dae, you may see decThumbsDBViewer.wlx_unloaded (in the dump the debugger may show it as something like ExceptionAddress: 0a7919e2 (<Unloaded_decThumbsDBViewer.wlx>+0x003019e2)).

The crash doesn't happpen each time TC is closed, it is rare indeed.
But I encountered it with Total Commander 9.12, betas of TC 9.20 and some 4.x versoins of decThumbsDBViewer.wlx plugin.

A comment on a crash dump by Christian Ghisler (from email):

Christian Ghisler wrote:

According to [the dump], the crash happened in Unloaded_decThumbsDBViewer.wlx which means that it crashed in the unload function (dll process detatch).

The bug is indeed in decThumbsDBViewer.wlx, see the crash report analysis below. When you look at section STACK_TEXT, you can see that no Total Commander code is in the stack. It seems that there is a background thread created by decThumbsDBViewer which is crashing when TC exits. That would also explain why TC cannot catch the exception: TC adds a global exception handler to all threads it creates. However, threads created by plugins cannot get this because TC cannot inject any code in them.

Plugin author, Dec, wrote in email reply on the issue that this plugin is not supported anymore (btw, as well as all other Dec's plugins for Total Commander.) Which means there will be no update with a fix for this issue._________________Android 4.3.1 no root, kernel 08.09.2016; Vista Home Premium SP2 rus 32 bit
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